Barb Jungr - Shelter From The Storm - Specs Blog
Voice of reason: Barb Jungr's 'Shelter From The Storm'
It's lovely to follow a sense of purpose and continuity in an
artist's work. Barb Jungr has long been one of our finest jazz vocalists, but
to my mind her talent and instincts for putting together an astonishing
collection of songs are now unerring. 'Shelter From The Storm' - album and show
- is her latest thing of wonder.
One of the reasons the new record is so satisfying is that it seems to tie
together various threads of Barb's recent work, acting as a kind of unofficial
sequel to about four recent projects, while still finding a new direction (so,
a perfect place to jump in, then take off!)... Brilliant at finding the nerve
centre of songs - particularly by men, stripping away any masculine bravado to
expose the raw sensitivity beneath - Barb made a magnificent record in 2010
called 'The Men I Love', where her 'new American songbook' featured songs by
Paul Simon, David Byrne and Todd Rundgren among others, including two hugely
important figures in her discography: Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen. Then came 'Stockport
to Memphis', an eclectic selection (from Sam Cooke to Joni Mitchell) but
crucially, featuring some imaginative and infectious originals, written with
pianist/arranger Simon Wallace. The pair also collaborated on the follow-up,
'Hard Rain', devoted to Dylan and Cohen protest songs - an uncompromising,
unashamedly political programme with its steel softened by the unfailingly
creative arrangements (if you thought it was impossible to hear 'Blowin' in the
Wind' as if it was new - think again). Then, most recently, she collaborated
across the pond with another master arranger, John McDaniel, for 'Come
Together' - an evening of Beatles songs, again, re-imagined and reshaped not
only by B's feminine perspective but J's US angle, ensuring that the song selection
wasn't too obvious (all hail the White Album!) and the covers were respectful
but never too reverential. I'm feverishly hoping they bring those
interpretations to disc at some point.
Well - that was an early digression! But 'Shelter from the Storm' is in some
ways the strong-willed, slightly rebellious offspring of all these forerunners.
More than anything, the album artwork/typography suggests this is 'Shelter'
from the 'Hard Rain', that album's bleak content now answered by the new
record's subtitle 'Songs of Hope for Troubled Times' and the dark interior now
opening out into a leafy park. However, the album ranges across an even wider
choice of covers than 'The Men I Love' - with showtunes nestling in among the
more brittle, modern entries - and, more good news, Barb is back writing again,
with a new American collaborator and piano magician, Laurence Hopgood.
How the record expresses this hope is woven as much into the musical arrangements as the lyrics. The Cohen song on this album is my all-time favourite of his: 'Sisters of Mercy'. Thanks to its nun-more-spiritual title and acoustic arrangement, the original certainly lends itself to a hushed, genteel treatment (such as the Linda Ronstadt / Emmylou Harris duet cover, angelically gorgeous but utterly chaste)...but not here. As Barb points out in her live introduction to the song, this is from when Cohen 'had the energy for two women'. The Jungr / Hopgood take teasingly begins in a just-this-side-of-exaggeration gospel style, before easing into a Latin shuffle that suggests the song's protagonist probably does have a few things to confess about. The song features what I think is one of the best closing couplets ever written: entirely as ambiguous or elegantly simple as you want it to be: 'And you won't make me jealous if I hear that they sweetened your night / We weren't lovers like that, and besides - it would still be all right.' Barb seizes on this as the key to the song, riffing on it as it nears its, well, climax. *cough* *goes for lie-down*
The band also rev up Joni Mitchell's 'Woodstock' in what must be one of the
record's stand-out tracks. Again, I sense a little mischief as the song opens
with graceful solemnity - I'm hoping it won't spoil it for you too much if I
say that you can expect a gear change or two, leading into an addictively funky
groove that restores an air of celebration to the song, however temporary. I
love the way that with L's use of different keyboard sounds, matched by
B's varied, virtuosic vocals (with the occasional nod, I *suspect*, to JM -
'staaaaaaaaaar-dust!' - but always retaining her own uniquely rich tone) -
you do also get a sense of different bands mashed up, following each
other, chasing the same tune.
But any playfulness never over-rides the album's sincerity, and fundamentally
good heart. The programme on the album must have been very carefully worked
out, and is - to me - utterly emotionally true. For example, the artists'
roving eyes for material demonstrate that whether you go all the way back to
the 'first' great American songbook or come closer to the present, human
longing has been a constant. The opening selection is an inspired 'Bali Hai' -
stripped from its 'South Pacific' context and re-cast in this small band
setting, the song acquires a lighter-footed, sinewy 'oomph', while staking its
claim as a universal anthem of belonging. I was also struck by the inclusion of
Bob Dylan's 'All Along the Watchtower' and Peter Gabriel's 'In Your Eyes' as a
single song, with verses for each woven around each other. An inspired move,
musically for sure, to see how the backbones of both could be fused - but also
neatly symbolic of the album's collaboration between UK and US artists. It's
also fascinating to hear how the mythic elusiveness of the Dylan lyric is
punctured by Gabriel's emotional directness: sometimes you just need to get to
the heart of the matter.
The celestial is a recurring theme: a tender treatment of Bowie's 'Life on
Mars?' and 'Space Oddity' closes the disc, and the three new tracks all look
heavenward - to the stars, planets and - powerfully so - Nina Simone's spirit.
('Stars Lazy But Shining', both complex and catchy, weaves its spell in the
video below.)
As you've probably gathered, 'Shelter from the Storm' is not without
melancholy: it understands that by definition, hope is always for something yet
to come. But track by track, it shows us how to cling on: through optimism,
humour, love, resolution and strength. Hope and jazz do, in fact, have this in
common, don't they? - the journey is what sustains you, even if you can never
know what's coming next.
*
Live, 'Shelter from the Storm' is all you could want from a gig - the already-brilliant
album material given a generous blast of nuclear-powered energy and intimate
focus. (I was at one of the recent London dates and was happily overwhelmed!)
The initial run of UK performances is nearly over - although in early April you
can still make Corby or Portsmouth. However, as you can see from Barb's epic live dates webpage, she keeps several of her
programmes alive at any one time, and it's sure to be back.
In the meantime, you can buy the album here. Visit the Linn website
anyway, because there are two extra tracks waiting for you that you can
download for free. They do fill out the overall picture - Bacharach
& David's 'What the World Needs Now is Love' is a suitably soulful
addition, plus an indispensable version of Springsteen's 'Long Walk
Home' (again, a personal favourite - I sometimes feel I might be a bit out
of step in my affection for the 'Magic' album), the most recent song covered in
the project, and fitting the theme like a glove.